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BBC Music Day Ambassador Lisa Stansfield took over the tram platform announcements. Lisa performed on the Manchester Metrolink Music Tram today, while earlier this week recorded her own announcements for the city's tram and light rail system.

"I've been around the world, but I, I I, could always find my ticket," she can be heard saying - a reference to her 1989 hit All Around the World."So make sure you've got yours before you get on board."

Lisa Stansfield,performed at Matt & Phreds in Manchester for an intimate acoustic show. In aid of helping Nordoff Robbins celebrate the incredible diversity of their charity, to help people with "music therapy"

The full programme for this year's EFG London Jazz Festival, which runs from 16 to 25 November, has been announced and includes some significant additions across concert hall, club and free stages.

The EFG London Jazz Festival opens on 16 November with its signature glittering gala performance, Jazz Voice, where Guy Barker’s 42-piece orchestra teams up with some of today’s most individual vocalists in a spectacular celebration of song, hosted by Jumoké Fashola. This year’s line-up includes Laila Biali, Allan Harris, Deva Mahal, Anthony Strong, Zara McFarlaneand Lisa Stansfield, with further names to be announced.

The EFG London Jazz Festival brings together musicians from across the planet, aiming to promote the love of jazz and reach as wide an audience as possible. This inclusivity is reflected in the Festival’s digital marketing with #WeAreJazz, which allows festival-goers to follow news and share memories, promoting diversity and the engagement with jazz by the broadest of audiences.

Now in its 26th year it remains the capital’s largest city-wide festival, with over 2,000 artists in more than 325 performances in concert halls, clubs, at family events, free concerts, films and talks, in over 70 venues across London.

Tickets on sale now, check the following link for details: TICKET LINKS

Lisa Stansfield has revealed that she once hit an industry professional “across the head” after he “squeezed her bum” when she was just 15.

The singer, who has a new single out, appeared on Good Morning Britain to chat to Ben Shephard and Susanna Reid about her decorated career in the spotlight.

Asked how the industry was when she first started, Stansfield said that she thinks it has “always been people with promises and dangling carrots” and that when stars are “young, impressionable and ambitious” then they want to believe things.

Elaborating, she explained: “[But] There was always part of me that didn’t believe these people and someone did try it on with me and they did get a big whack across the head.

“Just squeezing my bum, and I just wasn’t having any of it. And I think that’s what young girls should know. I was about 16, 15 I was. That guy has got his comeuppance.”Stansfield continued: “I first started out on TV… I did variety shows and I was terrible. "So, I went to this modelling school for my deportment, that’s where this guy was. He’s never going to do that again as he did it to other people much more serious than me, I was lucky.

“As a mum you have to tell your daughters or your sons that you have to be careful, people aren’t nice out there, there are nasty people.”

The 52-year-old told the show that things in the industry will change now and that they “have” to but added that she hopes it won’t make people “frightened to touch each other or to make advances in a nice way”.